[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[pct-l] The Diabetic Backpacker
I am (and have been since 1987) a Type 2 diabetic. I controlled my blood
sugar for several years with diet and exercise, then for several years with
oral medication, and now with insulin injections. I have carried insulin on
the trail for about ten years. I do eat three meals a day (none very heavy)
and some light snacks at home. On the trail, I do reduce my insulin
considerably and I tend to have more snacks and lighter meals. I think your
regimen of many snacks and no real meals would also do better for me. I
mention all this, because my experience tells me that all diabetics are
really somewhat different and unique and they need to manage things
differently. That being said, I think there is a lot of commonality of
acceptable foods, even if portions and distribution vary. Foods that I find
good to use on the trail include the following:
- Balance Bars --- They are 40/30/30 in carbs/protein/fat and are cheapest
at Trader Joe's. There are some other similarly balanced bars, but I am not
familiar with them and I like the flavors of Balance Bars. This balance
does not initially spike your blood sugar, and they were marketed to
diabetics when they were still made by a small company in Santa Barbara
before Kraft bought them.
- Sourdough bread, tortillas with preservative. (I can also eat other
breads, e.g. bagels if they don't have too much sugar, but I usually stayed
away from them before I started on insulin.)
- Granola --- Most are loaded with sugar, but there are some that don't
use sugar or use a little grape juice as a sweetener. (Trader Joe's has one
of the latter that I buy.)
- Italian-style dried salami
- Tuna in water in foil pouches (I guess you mentioned this.)
- Peanut butter brands that don't add any sugar; many do.
- Dehyrdated fruit within limits (Be careful; some have sugar added.)
- Cheese (This keeps surprisingly well.)
- Dehydrated vegetables, e.g. zucchini, carrots
Sorry for duplicating things you already mentioned. I hope this helps.
Phil
At 07:14 PM 10/28/04 -0400, you wrote:
>Here one that I bet even this list can not answer.
>
>I want recipes for the non-cooking-diabetic backpacker. This includes
snacks, breakfast, lunch, and supper. I have a new vacuum machine, which I
like a lot (Roberta Cobb recommendation). This is looking very good for
taking things on the trail and making them last a lot longer. That gives
me some more flexibility.
>
>I think low-cab bars are something to investigate. I am looking at low
sugar peanut butter/breads, some nuts/seeds, cheese & some crackers, tuna
in water, Pringles, and popcorn.
>I also would like to take some bagels and cream cheese if I can find low
sugar stuff.
>
>I have to eat periodically and no big meals while I hike. Use it as I go.
Anyway, any suggestions would be appreciated.
>
>Thanks, Switchback
>_______________________________________________
>pct-l mailing list
>pct-l@mailman.backcountry.net
>unsubscribe or change options:
>http://mailman.hack.net/mailman/listinfo/pct-l
>
>